(MENAFN- The Rio Times)
What Matters Today
1 EU energy ministers hold emergency Brussels meeting as gas prices surge 50% - von der Leyen promises "short-term targeted measures"; Jorgensen declares "we are in a price crisis"; gas storage at 29% with France and Germany at ~22%, Netherlands at 9%; Italy calls for ETS suspension
EU energy ministers convened in Brussels on Monday for emergency talks after the Iran war drove oil and gas prices sharply higher. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen told Reuters that "the war in Iran is undermining the European economy" and pledged to present emergency measures to EU leaders this week.
European Commissioner for Energy Dan Jorgensen confirmed the severity before the meeting: "We are in a price crisis." The Commission is considering state support for industry, national tax cuts, changes to the EU carbon market and potentially some form of gas-price intervention.
European benchmark gas prices have risen more than 50% since the crisis intensified. Gas storage across the EU stands at just 29% on average, with France and Germany near 22% and the Netherlands at a critical 9% - well below seasonal averages and among the lowest levels since the 2022 crisis.
Italy, Bulgaria, Czechia, Slovakia, and Poland are calling for suspension of the EU Emissions Trading System to ease industrial costs. Some diplomats expect Brussels to shift responsibility to national governments for tax cuts and subsidies, but this risks widening the gap between rich and poor member states - during the 2022 crisis, Germany spent three times more on support than all other members combined.
2 Kallas proposes "Black Sea model" for Hormuz - EU rejects Aspides expansion into the strait; France and Italy negotiate bilateral passage deals with Tehran; no European country willing to join Trump's naval coalition
EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas proposed a "Black Sea model" for the Strait of Hormuz - a diplomatic framework modelled on the earlier grain-corridor mechanism to restore commercial shipping without deepening the military conflict. She raised the idea with UN Secretary-General Guterres.
After a meeting of EU foreign ministers, Kallas confirmed "no appetite" among member states to extend the existing Aspides naval mission into Hormuz. Ministers discussed reinforcing the operation under its current Red Sea mandate but rejected changing its remit to cover the strait.
The Financial Times reported that France and Italy have begun direct negotiations with Tehran seeking bilateral deals to guarantee safe passage for ships flying their flags through Hormuz. No European country has publicly committed warships to Trump's proposed coalition.
Germany's Defence Minister Boris Pistorius said there would be "no military participation" but Berlin was open to diplomatic efforts. The UK said it was considering offering mine-hunting drones but PM Starmer maintained the UK would "not be drawn into the wider war." As covered in our previous Europe Intelligence Brief, the continent is choosing diplomacy over military participation in the Hormuz crisis.
3 Merz's €600 billion defence push ripples across German economy - defence contractors see demand surge; Poland commits nearly 5% of GDP; €500 billion infrastructure fund and €100 billion Zeitenwende fund add to transformation; Europe's largest military rearmament since the Cold War
Bloomberg reported Monday that Germany's €600 billion (~$650 billion) defence commitment is producing a visible industrial transformation, with firms like HAT seeing a leap in demand from defence clients. The spending joins a €500 billion (~$540 billion) infrastructure fund and the existing €100 billion (~$108 billion) Zeitenwende special fund.
Rheinmetall is guiding 40–45% sales growth for 2026, while Leonardo surged 7.8% and Daimler Truck pointed to a 7,000-unit French Army Zetros order as evidence of strategic repositioning. Defence stocks are the lone consistent outperformers in European equity markets this year.
Poland has committed nearly 5% of GDP to defence by the end of 2026, the highest proportion in NATO. The combined European rearmament represents the continent's largest military transformation since the Cold War.
Defence contractors are now being priced as strategic infrastructure with long-dated government contracts providing earnings visibility that few other sectors can match. The Iran war has accelerated procurement timelines that were already shortened by the Ukraine conflict, creating a multi-year industrial cycle that extends well beyond the current crisis.
4 ECB opens March 18–19 meeting facing dramatically changed landscape - deposit rate at 2.0%; Lagarde vows to "do everything necessary"; rate cuts priced out for 2026; two 25bp hikes priced by year-end; new staff projections will incorporate oil shock for first time
The European Central Bank opens its Governing Council meeting tomorrow in Frankfurt facing the most consequential policy decision since the 2022 rate-hiking cycle. The deposit facility rate stands at 2.0% after eight consecutive cuts from June 2024 to June 2025, and five consecutive holds since.
ECB President Christine Lagarde told interviewers that the bank "will do everything necessary to keep inflation under control." Markets have priced out rate cuts entirely for 2026, with two 25bp hikes now priced by year-end. The February minutes showed officials were worried about inflation undershooting - a concern the oil shock has completely reversed.
New staff projections will be the first to incorporate the Iran war's energy shock. Pre-war forecasts showed headline inflation at 1.9% for 2026 and growth at 1.2%. Both numbers will be revised significantly - Vanguard has called the situation a "significant stagflationary shock."
ECB board member Isabel Schnabel has endorsed the market view that the next rate move will be a hike. Deutsche Bank's base case is rates on hold through 2026 with a hike in mid-2027. The Conference Board estimates oil sustained above $100/barrel could shave 0.1–0.3 percentage points from eurozone growth. This week's meeting opens a day before the BoJ and BoE also decide, making it the first week since December 2021 with all four G4 central banks meeting simultaneously.
5 Danish Energy Minister begs citizens not to drive as energy crisis hits European households - Red Sea oil shipments surge 21-fold as tankers reroute around Hormuz; Section 301 probes target EU alongside 15 economies; von der Leyen reopens nuclear debate with €200 million SMR guarantee
Denmark's Energy Minister Lars Aagaard made an extraordinary public plea for citizens not to use their cars during the energy crisis, the most direct consumer-level intervention by a European government since the 2022 emergency. The appeal captures the speed at which the Hormuz disruption is reaching European households.
Nikkei Asia reported that Red Sea oil shipments have surged 21-fold as tankers reroute around Hormuz, fundamentally restructuring global shipping patterns. Longer routes increase transport costs and delivery times, adding to inflationary pressure across Europe's import-dependent economy.
The US Trade Representative opened Section 301 investigations into 16 economies including the EU, targeting manufacturing practices. With remedies due by July, the probes create a dual trade-plus-energy shock for European exporters already facing margin compression from high energy costs.
Von der Leyen reopened Europe's nuclear debate, stating that reducing nuclear energy had increased dependence on imported fossil fuels and announcing a €200 million (~$216 million) EU guarantee for private investment in small modular reactor technology. Germany's environment minister pushed back, defending wind and solar. As covered in The Rio Times' Europe Intelligence Brief, the energy crisis is forcing Europe to confront structural choices about its energy mix that the 2022 crisis only deferred.
Market Snapshot
| INSTRUMENT |
LEVEL |
MOVE |
NOTE |
| Brent Crude ($/bbl) |
~$103 |
▲ +47% since Feb 28 |
Opened $105.26 Monday; tankers testing Hormuz passage; Goldman March avg >$100; IEA 412M bbl release; Bessent confirmed tankers transiting |
| EU Gas (TTF) |
Elevated |
▲ +50% since war began |
EU storage 29% (France/Germany ~22%, Netherlands 9%); Qatar LNG force majeure; emergency ministerial today; von der Leyen: "price crisis" |
| Euro Stoxx 50 |
~5,200 |
▼ pressured by energy |
Banks, healthcare, consumer cyclicals lead losses; defence stocks outperform; ECB Mar 18–19; Section 301 probes; BMW margin warnings |
| ECB Deposit Rate |
2.00% |
- hold; cuts priced out |
Meeting Mar 18–19; Lagarde: "everything necessary"; two 25bp hikes priced by Dec; Schnabel endorses hike view; new staff projections with oil shock |
| EUR/USD |
~$1.09 |
▼ weakened from $1.18 highs |
Oil shock widening energy trade deficit; hawkish Fed supports USD; ECB hold vs Fed hold creates rate differential uncertainty; Section 301 adds pressure |
| Rheinmetall |
Outperforming |
▲ 40–45% sales growth guided |
Merz €600bn (~$650bn) defence push; Leonardo +7.8%; Daimler Truck 7K Zetros order; defence priced as strategic infrastructure; Poland 5% GDP defence |
| German Bund 10Y |
~2.85% |
▲ rising on defence spending |
€600bn defence + €500bn infrastructure fiscal expansion; ECB hike expectations; energy inflation pass-through; CPI sticky at 1.9% pre-shock |
| BMW / VW |
Under pressure |
▼ margin compression |
BMW EBT −5–10% 2026; tariffs 1.25pp drag; VW cutting 50K jobs by 2030; Mercedes EBT halved; China EV competition; Section 301 adds trade risk |
| UK BoE Rate |
4.50% |
- decision Mar 19 |
Hold expected; UK CPI 3.4%; Starmer: "not drawn into wider war"; mine-hunting drones offered; Section 301 targets UK |
| Gold ($/oz) |
~$5,025 |
▼ slight pullback |
Dollar modestly weaker; geopolitical premium intact; safe-haven demand persists; European investors hedging energy + currency risk |
Conflict & Stability Tracker
● Critical
European Energy Emergency - Gas Storage Crisis
EU gas +50%; storage 29% (France/Germany ~22%, Netherlands 9%); emergency ministerial today; von der Leyen: "price crisis"; Italy wants ETS scrapped; Denmark: don't drive; Qatar LNG force majeure; Red Sea rerouting +21x; summer refill season at risk
● Critical
ECB - Stagflation Trap Opens Tomorrow
Meeting Mar 18–19; deposit rate 2.0%; cuts priced out; two hikes priced by Dec; Lagarde: "everything necessary"; Schnabel endorses hike view; new staff projections with oil shock; pre-war CPI 1.9% now heading higher; growth 1.2% at risk
● Tense
Hormuz - Europe Chooses Diplomacy Over Warships
Kallas "Black Sea model" proposal; Aspides expansion rejected; France/Italy negotiating bilateral passage with Tehran; Germany: "no military participation"; UK: "not drawn in"; Starmer offers mine-hunting drones; Trump "very bad future" for NATO warning
● Watching
European Rearmament - Cold War-Scale Spending
Germany €600bn (~$650bn) defence + €500bn infra + €100bn Zeitenwende; Poland 5% GDP; Rheinmetall 40–45% sales growth; Leonardo +7.8%; Daimler Truck Zetros orders; defence priced as infrastructure; fiscal expansion pressures Bund yields
Fast Take
ENERGY The emergency ministerial is the most significant EU energy intervention since the 2022 crisis, and the numbers explain why. Gas storage at 29% with the Netherlands at 9% and France and Germany at 22% means Europe enters the summer refill season from a historically weak position. Gas prices up 50% since the war began, Qatar's LNG force majeure cutting supply, and the Hormuz closure blocking both oil and LNG flows create a triple shock that no single intervention can fix. Von der Leyen's promise of "short-term targeted measures" sounds familiar - it is the same language Brussels used in 2022. The difference is that Europe diversified away from Russian gas only to find itself exposed to Hormuz-dependent alternatives. The ETS suspension debate splitting Italy and Poland against the Nordics tells you the climate-versus-affordability tension is back in force.
DIPLOMACY Kallas's "Black Sea model" is the most creative European proposal of the crisis. The grain corridor mechanism moved millions of tonnes of Ukrainian grain through contested waters without a military convoy. Applying that logic to Hormuz - negotiated passage guaranteed by multilateral agreement rather than warships - is the kind of diplomatic innovation that Europe has historically been good at when it cannot or will not use force. France and Italy negotiating bilateral passage deals with Tehran is the parallel track. Between the multilateral model and bilateral deals, Europe is building a non-military pathway to energy security. Whether Iran cooperates depends on whether Tehran sees more value in controlled passage or continued leverage.
DEFENCE Germany's €600 billion (~$650 billion) defence commitment plus €500 billion (~$540 billion) in infrastructure and the €100 billion (~$108 billion) Zeitenwende fund total more than €1.2 trillion (~$1.3 trillion) in fiscal expansion - the largest state-directed investment programme in German history since reunification. Rheinmetall guiding 40–45% sales growth is the war dividend in numerical form. Defence contractors being priced as strategic infrastructure with long-dated government contracts tells you the market has decided this spending cycle is structural, not cyclical. Poland at 5% of GDP is the continental benchmark. For Latin American investors, European defence is now one of the few sectors with multi-year earnings visibility in an otherwise uncertain continent.
MONETARY The ECB's March 18–19 meeting is the most consequential since the 2022 hiking cycle began. The Governing Council built its 2026 outlook around disinflationary trends and modest growth. Both assumptions are now wrong. Oil above $100 will push headline inflation above 2% from March onwards, while energy costs compress industrial margins and slow activity. Lagarde's pledge to "do everything necessary" echoes Draghi's famous 2012 formulation - but this time the tool is tightening, not easing. The fact that markets have priced out all cuts and priced in two hikes by December tells you the regime shift is already underway. The RBA's split 5-4 hike to 4.10% today shows what happens when a central bank decides inflation matters more than growth. The question is whether the ECB reaches the same conclusion tomorrow.
TRADE Section 301 probes targeting the EU alongside 15 other economies creates a dual shock for European exporters. BMW warning of 5–10% earnings decline and a 1.25 percentage point tariff drag, VW cutting 50,000 jobs by 2030, and Mercedes seeing earnings halved describe an auto sector that is being compressed from three directions simultaneously: Chinese EV competition, US tariffs, and energy costs. The Danish Energy Minister begging citizens not to drive is the consumer-level expression of the same crisis that is hitting boardrooms. When the energy minister of one of Europe's wealthiest countries makes that plea, the crisis has moved from markets to kitchen tables.
Developments to Watch
1
ECB Governing Council meeting - March 18–19 - the first session with new staff projections incorporating the oil shock; the hold is virtually certain but the statement, press conference, and revised forecasts will define the European rate outlook for the rest of 2026; Lagarde's characterisation of the oil shock - whether "transitory" or structural - will move markets; two hikes priced by December means any deviation from hawkish expectations will be significant.
2
European Council summit - later this week - heads of state will receive von der Leyen's emergency energy measures; the ETS suspension debate will test climate policy solidarity; Antonio Costa has declared 2026 "the year of European competitiveness" but the energy shock makes that ambition harder to deliver; defence spending commitments and the Hormuz response will also feature.
3
France-Italy bilateral Hormuz negotiations with Tehran - the Financial Times reported negotiations are underway seeking guaranteed safe passage for French- and Italian-flagged ships; the success of these talks could establish a European pathway to Hormuz transit that bypasses the US military coalition; failure would increase pressure for a naval response that Europe's governments have so far resisted.
4
Bank of England rate decision - March 19 - the BoE meets with UK CPI at 3.4%, well above its 2% target; hold at 4.50% is expected; Starmer's pledge not to be "drawn into the wider war" has economic implications for UK energy policy; the UK's mine-hunting drone offer to the Hormuz coalition is the minimum viable contribution; Section 301 probes also target the UK.
5
EU gas storage refill trajectory - 90% mandate at risk - with storage at 29% and LNG prices elevated, the cost of refilling to the mandated 90% before next winter may be severe; E3G analysis warns that low starting levels combined with high prices create a structural vulnerability that short-term measures cannot resolve; the refill season starting from below 30% is unprecedented outside the 2022 crisis.
6
Section 301 remedies - public comments April 15, remedies by July - USTR probes targeting the EU could produce tariffs that replace the IEEPA duties struck down by the Supreme Court; the investigations add a second front of economic pressure alongside the energy crisis; Bessent said tariffs would return to "pre-ruling levels by August"; the EU is America's largest trade partner, making the probes systemically significant.
Sovereign & Credit Pulse
| COUNTRY |
INDICATOR |
SIGNAL |
| Eurozone |
ECB Mar 18–19; energy crisis |
Deposit rate 2.0%; cuts priced out; two hikes by Dec; gas +50%; storage 29%; oil $103; Lagarde: "everything necessary"; Vanguard: "stagflationary shock" |
| Germany |
Defence; energy; auto |
€600bn (~$650bn) defence + €500bn infra; Rheinmetall 40–45%; gas storage ~22%; BMW EBT −5–10%; VW 50K jobs cut; Pistorius: no Hormuz military; Ifo warns slowdown |
| France |
Hormuz bilateral; nuclear; local elections |
Negotiating passage with Tehran; Macron said would "open" Hormuz with fleet then stepped back; 7K Daimler Zetros order; local elections first round fragmented; gas storage ~22% |
| United Kingdom |
BoE Mar 19; Hormuz; trade |
Rate 4.50%; CPI 3.4%; hold expected; Starmer: "not drawn in"; mine-hunting drones offered; Section 301 probe; Brexit trade flexibility limited |
| Italy |
ETS; Hormuz bilateral; energy |
Leading ETS suspension call; negotiating Hormuz passage with Tehran; VAT revenue redirected to consumer relief; Leonardo +7.8%; industrial energy costs acute |
| Poland |
Defence 5% GDP; ETS |
Highest NATO defence spending ratio; ETS suspension supporter; energy costs rising; elections 2026 no M&A slowdown expected; coal transition accelerating |
Power Players
Ursula von der Leyen - the Commission President's declaration that "the war in Iran is undermining the European economy" and her promise of "short-term targeted measures" for EU leaders this week position her at the centre of Europe's crisis response; her reopening of the nuclear debate with a €200 million (~$216 million) SMR guarantee is the most significant shift in EU energy policy since the 2022 crisis; Germany's pushback on nuclear ensures the debate will be contentious.
Kaja Kallas - the EU foreign policy chief's "Black Sea model" proposal for Hormuz is the most creative diplomatic initiative of the crisis; by raising it with UN Secretary-General Guterres and confirming "no appetite" for Aspides expansion into the strait, she is defining Europe's response as diplomatic rather than military; the proposal's viability depends on Iranian cooperation and US tolerance of a non-military approach.
Christine Lagarde - the ECB President enters the March 18–19 meeting having pledged to "do everything necessary to keep inflation under control"; the phrase deliberately echoes Draghi's 2012 formulation, but the tool now is tightening rather than easing; her characterisation of the oil shock - whether temporary supply disruption or structural inflation risk - will define the European rate path for the remainder of 2026.
Dan Jorgensen - the European Commissioner for Energy's admission that "we are in a price crisis" before the emergency ministerial set the tone for Monday's talks; his task is to produce measures that address affordability without dismantling the ETS framework that seven Nordic and liberal ministers are defending; the gap between Italy's call for ETS suspension and Denmark's defence of carbon pricing runs directly through his portfolio.
Boris Pistorius - Germany's Defence Minister secured agreement for 35 PAC-3 Patriot interceptors for Ukraine while declaring "no military participation" in the Hormuz coalition; he is the operational face of Germany's €600 billion (~$650 billion) rearmament, managing procurement acceleration alongside diplomatic restraint on the Iran war; his dual role captures the tension between Europe's military transformation and its reluctance to use force outside its immediate neighbourhood.
Regulatory & Policy Watch
1
EU ETS suspension debate - Italy, Bulgaria, Czechia, Slovakia, Poland vs Nordic/liberal bloc - five member states are calling for suspension of the EU's carbon market to ease industrial energy costs; seven energy ministers from Denmark, Finland, Latvia, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and Portugal warned the Commission not to change market rules; the ETS review scheduled for Q3 2026 has become the battleground for Europe's climate-versus-affordability tension.
2
ECB new staff projections - first with oil shock - the March 18–19 meeting will produce revised inflation and growth forecasts incorporating the Hormuz disruption; pre-war projections showed headline inflation at 1.9% for 2026 and growth at 1.2%; the revisions will quantify the stagflationary impact and shape the rate narrative for Q2–Q3 2026.
3
Section 301 probes - EU targeted alongside 15 economies - USTR investigations into manufacturing practices give the administration an alternative legal pathway to reimpose tariffs after the Supreme Court struck down IEEPA duties; public comments due April 15 with remedies by July; the EU is America's largest trade partner, making the probes systemically significant for European exporters.
4
Von der Leyen's nuclear pivot - €200 million SMR guarantee - the Commission President announced EU backing for small modular reactor investment, arguing that reducing nuclear had increased fossil fuel dependence; this is the most significant shift in EU nuclear policy in years; Germany, Austria and Luxembourg oppose; France sees nuclear as central to industrial resilience; the energy crisis gives the nuclear camp its strongest argument since Fukushima.
Calendar
| DATE |
EVENT |
SIGNIFICANCE |
| Mar 17 |
EU energy ministers emergency meeting |
Gas +50%; storage 29%; ETS debate; state aid; price intervention; von der Leyen emergency measures; Denmark: don't drive |
| Mar 18–19 |
ECB Governing Council meeting |
Deposit rate 2.0%; hold expected; new staff projections with oil shock; Lagarde presser; rate path redefined; two hikes priced by Dec |
| Mar 19 |
Bank of England rate decision |
Rate 4.50%; hold expected; UK CPI 3.4%; Starmer Hormuz position; Section 301 UK; sterling vulnerability |
| Mar 20–21 |
European Council summit |
Heads of state; von der Leyen emergency measures; ETS debate; defence commitments; Hormuz response; Costa "year of competitiveness" |
| Apr 15 |
Section 301 public comments deadline |
EU targeted alongside 15 economies; remedies by July; alternative legal pathway to IEEPA tariffs struck down by SCOTUS; EU = largest US trade partner |
| Q3 2026 |
EU ETS review |
Carbon market future; Italy/Poland vs Nordics; 25-year framework at risk; climate policy solidarity test; industrial competitiveness vs decarbonisation |
Bottom Line
Europe diversified away from Russian gas after 2022 and told itself the energy crisis was over. The Hormuz shutdown has proved that assumption wrong. Gas storage at 29%, with the Netherlands at 9%, means the continent enters summer from a position of structural weakness.
Von der Leyen's promise of "short-term targeted measures" is the same language Brussels used four years ago. The question is whether the measures will be different this time - or whether Europe will repeat the cycle of emergency intervention, fiscal divergence, and deferred structural reform.
Kallas's "Black Sea model" for Hormuz is the most promising diplomatic initiative Europe has produced in the crisis. A negotiated passage framework that bypasses the military coalition Trump is demanding would give Europe energy access without military entanglement.
France and Italy negotiating bilateral passage with Tehran is the parallel track. Between multilateral models and bilateral deals, Europe is building a non-military pathway. Whether Iran cooperates depends on whether Tehran values controlled passage or continued leverage more.
The ECB meets tomorrow facing a landscape that has changed more in two weeks than in the previous six months. Rate cuts are priced out. Two hikes are priced in by December. Lagarde's pledge to "do everything necessary" sets up a meeting where the statement matters more than the decision.
The new staff projections will tell Europe's economy what the oil shock means in numbers. If the revisions show inflation above 2.5% and growth below 1%, the stagflation narrative hardens - and every industrial and fiscal plan built on rate relief must be rewritten.
Germany's €1.2 trillion (~$1.3 trillion) combined fiscal expansion - defence, infrastructure, and Zeitenwende - is the largest state-directed investment programme since reunification. Defence stocks outperforming everything else on European markets tells you where capital sees multi-year visibility.
But the same fiscal expansion is pushing Bund yields higher, creating a tension between the military transformation Europe needs and the borrowing costs its economies can sustain.
When Denmark's energy minister begs citizens not to drive, the crisis has moved from trading floors to kitchen tables. This is part of The Rio Times' daily intelligence coverage of Europe for the Latin American financial community.
The ETS suspension debate, the nuclear revival, the Section 301 probes, and the ECB's pivot from easing to vigilance are all expressions of the same underlying reality: Europe's economic model depends on imported energy, open trade routes, and stable prices - and all three are under simultaneous assault.
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